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my pick-up needs to grow up

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Too your point, the 2500 is almost a HD working truck. The 1500 is not much of a truck at all. There really is not much of a comparison. The engine and transmission is only one part of the package. I have 2022 Denali with the 6.2L. I truly enjoy driving it and using for light truck work when needed. Load up the bed with 1,000 pounds of stuff and the tiny rear brakes become evident. It was purchased as a NY to Florida travel runner, and it does real well for that. After the recall oil change to the 0w-40 super car formulae the fuel economy has increased. Last trip home the truck did 21.7 mpg. Consider this oil discount cost is near $12/quart. Dealer is offering oil and filter change for $139.99 plus taxes. It takes 8 quarts.
Looking at new or fairly the increased maintenance costs for Diesel are incremental. If the gasser has to work hard to pull hills you should really run it on premium fuel. Pedal down, 4,200 rpm for extended periods works any gas engine hard. Adding the cost for premium fuel these days you catch up quickly to the price of Diesel. I often run the plus or mid-grade fuel as my trucks begins to run like crap on regular. I know that hurts it. Not only does it like premium but it also runs much better on the top tier stuff. During trips I use truck stops such as Flying J, Pilot, Loves. Get it home and fill it at Sunoco, it drives differently. It likes the good stuff.
I've heard a lot of guys recommend premium for the 6.2 with some even going to 93 because it will knock on 91 at times.

The 6.6 is designed and tuned differently and shouldn't be an issue on 87 octane.
 
I've heard a lot of guys recommend premium for the 6.2 with some even going to 93 because it will knock on 91 at times.

The 6.6 is designed and tuned differently and shouldn't be an issue on 87 octane.
I have never actually heard my engine knock even running it on regular. When I first got it I used regular for a few tanks and did not detect any problem. At some point I treated it t o Premium at Costco and shortly after was amazed at the difference in how it ran. Even at idle and gentle acceleration it was different. As I drive it gently it does seem to do just fine on brand name mid-grade 89 octane stuff. I feel little difference between that and full premium.

As for the engines that are rated and so called designed to run on regular, normal conditions they can. Problem I see is when conditions become extreme and due to various factors the combustion process goes out of control and things go very quickly from a perfectly running engine to a damaged mess. The process is repeatable. You take hill, you lose power, you push the pedal further, repeat. Then you get the miss. Maybe you even get some smoke. More power loss. It either stops or you shut it off and never to go again.
Check out the Motor Oil Geek on You Tube and look for some of the Videos discussing low speed pre-ignition and how the engine oil contributes to that.
 

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